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Grim History Of Armenians In Turkey That Led To Accusations Of Genoc

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  • Grim History Of Armenians In Turkey That Led To Accusations Of Genoc

    GRIM HISTORY OF ARMENIANS IN TURKEY THAT LED TO ACCUSATIONS OF GENOCIDE
    Mark Tran

    guardian.co.uk
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/wor ld/2010/mar/05/history-armenia-turkey-genocide
    Fri day 5 March 2010 12.11 GMT

    Repression of 2.5 million people in Ottoman empire dates back to
    autonomy movement in late 19th century

    Ottoman soldiers posing in front of hanged Armenians in 1915. A US
    congressional committee yesterday voted to label the Ottoman empire's
    actions as genocide. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images

    Armenia believes Turkey committed genocide in the deaths of at least
    1 million Armenians when they were deported from Turkish Armenia in
    1915, and welcomes the non-binding resolution passed by the US house
    foreign affairs committee.

    Repression of the 2.5 million Armenians in the Ottoman empire dates
    back to 1894-96 under Sultan Abdulhamid, when Armenians in the eastern
    provinces, encouraged by Russia, began agitating for autonomy.

    Abdulhamid cracked down on separatist sentiment by encouraging
    nationalistic feelings against Armenians among neighbouring Kurdish
    tribesmen.

    A combination of Kurdish persecution and a rise in taxes led to an
    Armenian uprising that was brutally suppressed by Turkish troops
    and Kurdish tribesmen in 1894. Thousands of Armenians were killed
    and their villages burned. Two years later, another revolt broke
    out when Armenian rebels seized the Ottoman bank in Istanbul. More
    than 50,000 Armenians were killed by mobs apparently co-ordinated by
    government troops.

    Those death tolls were dwarfed by the killings during the first world
    war, when Armenians from the Caucasus formed volunteer battalions
    to help the Russian army against the Turks. Early in 1915, these
    battalions organised the recruiting of Turkish Armenians from behind
    Turkish lines.

    The Young Turk government reacted by ordering the deportation of the
    Armenian population to Syria and Palestine. About 1 million died from
    starvation or were killed by Arab or Kurdish tribes along the route.

    Many survivors fled to Russian Armenia where, in 1918, an independent
    Armenian republic was established. Armenia won independence when the
    Soviet Union fractured in 1991.

    Turkey accepts that atrocities took place but argues that there was
    no systematic attempt to destroy the Christian Armenians. It puts the
    number of deaths during 1915 at around 300,000 and says many innocent
    Muslim Turks also died in the turmoil of war.

    The legal definition of genocide is found in the 1948 UN convention
    on the prevention and punishment of the crime of genocide.

    Article two of this convention defines genocide as "any of the
    following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part,
    a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such: killing
    members of the group; causing serious bodily or mental harm to members
    of the group; deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life
    calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in
    part; imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group;
    [and] forcibly transferring children of the group to another group."

    Henri Barkey, a Turkey scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for
    International Peace in Washington DC, said that "the overwhelming
    historical evidence demonstrates that what took place in 1915 was
    genocide". He nevertheless opposes the US ruling as a needless
    political manoeuvre.

    Argentina, Belgium, Canada, France, Italy, Russia and Uruguay are among
    more than 20 countries which have formally recognised genocide against
    the Armenians. The European parliament and the UN sub-commission on
    prevention of discrimination and protection of minorities have also
    done so.
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